6 Mo. App. 434 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action by a minor, who sues by next friend, against defendant, a corporation, for damages caused by the negligence of defendant in failing to provide safe machinery, by reason of which the plaintiif, whilst in defendant’s employ, lost his hand. There was a verdict and judgment for $1,000 ; and defendant appeals.
The machine at which plaintiif was working at the time of the accident was a brick-machine. On a mould-wheel five feet in diameter, which revolves horizontally, is placed a bed-plate containing eighteen brick-moulds. The moulds, in passing under the feeder where they receive the clay, are covered ; but they pass over a space of about fourteen inches which is uncovered. The bottom of each mould is movable, and is called a plunger. This plunger, by means of an in
There was evidence that the father and mother of plaintiff had, for a valuable consideration, released to defendant any claim which they might have on account of the injury done to their son.
The servant engaged in any employment, dangerous or not, takes the ordinary risks of his employment; and if he has to do with dangerous machinery, he must use proportionate care. But extraordinary risks, that might be foreseen by the master in the exercise of ordinary care and foresight, the servant does not take. The master must make use of ordinary care to procure suitable machinery, and to keep it in such a condition that the risk to his employees will not be greatly increased; and any such greatly increased risk is the negligence of the master, for which he is responsible. Extraordinary care to make machinery as safe as possible, by means of all devices which ingenuity may suggest, is not required; but if ordinary care and diligence requires the placing of a guard, it must be done.
The doctrine of negligence and contributory negligence, and of the duties of employers in regard to the furnishing of proper appliances for the use of their employees, has been so frequently and so recently examined by this court that it is unnecessary to do more than refer to some of the cases. Nolan v. Shickle, 3 Mo. App. 300; Kempinger v. Railroad Co., 3 Mo. App. 581; Meyer v. Railroad Co., ante, p. 27; Dowling v. Allen & Co., ante, p. 195; Bridges v. Railroad Co., ante, p. 389.
There was some evidence to support the verdict, and the court committed no error in refusing the instruction for a nonsuit asked at the close of plaintiff’s case.
It is complained that the first instruction asked for plaintiff is unmeaning. This instruction tells the jury intelligibly enough, we think, that the release given by plaintiff’s parents to defendant is a release of no part of plaintiff’s claim for any damages sustained by him personally, but that no recovery can be had for any loss of possible earnings by plaintiff during his minority. The instruction can be understood to mean nothing but this, and is susceptible of no interpretation which could prejudice defendant in the least.
It is said that the second instruction for plaintiff is
That the oiling is very dangerous work seems to be quite clear from the evidence. The utmost that can fairly be claimed for defendant, as to that, is that some witnesses said the work was not dangerous if due care was used. It is manifest that a momentary inattention, or a mere slip of the foot, might cause a dreadful injury to the boy employed in oiling. The thing must be done, as one witness says, “in the turn of a hand.” The actual time during which each plunger was exposed for oiling, by the movement of the wheel, was one second and a very small fraction. Fifty-four plungers passed over the open space in sixty seconds ; ,and if the rag is not removed before the plunger begins to fall, mutilation appears to be the probable result.- The weight of the evidence seems to be that the oiling could not be done so well by means of a mop, and that the employees preferred the use of the hand ; but there was some testimony to the effect that a mop might be used, that it is efficiently used on similar machines, and that the objection to it is that it consumes too much oil. Something, in cases of this kind, may be left also to the common sense of the jury. It does not need an expert to tell us that if, as the testimony is, these plungers come up level with the bed-plate for the purpose of being oiled, every part of their surface can be touched with oil without the application of the hand, although it is quite likely that this can be more commodiously done with the hand. The plaintiff himself testifies that he was not aware of the danger of oiling the moulds, until after the accident.
Appellant contends that there was no evidence whatever that the brick-machine was defective in not having a guard. It is true that one foreman testified that the guard actually
It is claimed that there was no evidence before the jury from which they could calculate the actual damage to plaintiff by the loss of his arm. This is not a matter of mere calculation. A verdict in a case of this sort need not be arrived at by determining the daily wages that the plaintiff might have earned with two hands from the age of twénty-one, and then estimating his expectation of life. An arm is worth $1,000 to a healthy boy of sixteen, as a mere matter of money, anywhere in the United States. The jury might give a round compensation, taking into consideration the bodily and mental suffering of plaintiff. The verdict cannot be called excessive.
Our attention is not directed by counsel to any material error in this record to the prejudice of appellant, and for which the judgment ought to be reversed. The judgment will therefore be affirmed.